by Mildred
Cookson, The Mills Archive Trust, UK
I wrote in the June issue of Milling and Grain that Rex on his return from the USA "discovered that an article in the Daily Mail on June 17th, 1929 entitled ‘Our Vanishing Windmills: How you can help save them’. This was to change his life and that of many others."
A hundred years ago, Spanish Flu had infected one third of the world's population and killed 50 million people, more than the recently ended First World War. These two disasters had killed off or incapacitated a disproportionately large number of working-class men. The social impact of this twin cataclysm has been well-documented from the loss of great poets to the gradual empowerment of women.
I wrote in the June issue of Milling and Grain that Rex on his return from the USA "discovered that an article in the Daily Mail on June 17th, 1929 entitled ‘Our Vanishing Windmills: How you can help save them’. This was to change his life and that of many others."
A hundred years ago, Spanish Flu had infected one third of the world's population and killed 50 million people, more than the recently ended First World War. These two disasters had killed off or incapacitated a disproportionately large number of working-class men. The social impact of this twin cataclysm has been well-documented from the loss of great poets to the gradual empowerment of women.
What can easily be forgotten was the impact on small mills, particularly in rural areas. During the War these, mainly small family businesses, survived with the help of the elderly and the female members of the family and the local community. However, ten years later a lost generation of would-be millers and the increasing needs for repairs meant that many traditional mills had ceased working and were vanishing from England's picturesque landscape. The Daily Mail appeal prompted a national upsurge in interest in windmills and the work of the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings (SPAB).
Read more, HERE.
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